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Cell Papilloma (cell + papilloma)
Kinds of Cell Papilloma Selected AbstractsSQUAMOUS CELL PAPILLOMA OF THE ESOPHAGUS: CLINICOPATHOLOGICAL STUDY OF 24 CASESDIGESTIVE ENDOSCOPY, Issue 4 2004Junya Oguma Background:, Squamous cell papilloma of the esophagus is considered to be a rare condition; however, the number of cases with this condition reported in recent years has increased, perhaps due to advances in endoscopic diagnosis. Methods:, We reviewed the clinicopathological features of 26 lesions of squamous cell papilloma of the esophagus in 24 cases seen at our hospital from 1994 to 2003. There were nine men and 15 women, with a mean age of 60.5 years (range, 31,82 years). Six patients had a history of malignant disease in the past. With regard to the presence of other lesions in the esophagus, six patients had hiatal hernia and four had gastroesophageal re,ux disease. Results:, Two patients each had two lesions of squamous cell papilloma. There were seven lesions in which in,ammatory cell in,ltration was found on hisotological examination, of which four had underlying hiatal hernia; ,ve lesions were found to have mild dysplasia on histological examination of which three had gastroesophageal re,ux disease. The median duration of follow up of the cases was 8 months (range, 1,101 months). During the follow-up period, none of the lesions showed any dramatic change of appearance or malignant transformation. Conclusion:, In principle, while it may be suf,cient to keep patients with squamous cell papilloma of the esophagus under simple follow up, the patients must be investigated to rule out malignancy of other organs, and the small probability of malignant transformation of the tumor must always be borne in mind. [source] Solitary squamous cell papilloma of the lung in a 40-year-old woman with recurrent laryngeal papillomatosisPATHOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Issue 5 2000Hidekazu Harada A rare case of recurrent respiratory papillomatosis (RRP) is reported with a review of the literature. A 40-year-old Japanese woman had suffered from RRP since 1 year of age. She developed a pulmonary squamous papilloma with a thin-walled cavity, which was suspected as being lung carcinoma. The trachea and bronchi around the tumor were intact, and no malignant transformation was present. Two types of human papillomavirus, 6 and 16, were detected, both in the laryngeal and pulmonary papillomas by in situ hybridization and the polymerase chain reaction method. To date, only 40 cases of juvenile laryngeal papilloma with pulmonary involvement have been reported in the English literature. [source] The Drake Health Registry Study: Findings from fifteen years of continuous bladder cancer screeningAMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE, Issue 2 2003Gary M. Marsh PhD Abstract Background The Drake Health Registry Study (DHRS) is an ongoing bladder cancer screening program initiated in 1986 due to workers' probable past exposure to the bladder carcinogen, beta-naphthylamine (BNA). Methods At periodic screening visits, a health survey is administered and three screening tests are applied to a urine sample, urinalysis (UA), papanicolaou (PAP), and quantitative fluorescence image analysis (QFIA). Positive screens are eligible for a free bladder cystoscopy with random biopsies. Results Forty of 51 persons eligible for diagnostic evaluation underwent cystoscopy. One person was diagnosed with carcinoma in situ, two with transitional cell papilloma, 14 with dysplasia, two of which developed transitional cell carcinoma; 26 had bladder abnormalities such as chronic inflammation, chronic cystitis, atypical changes, atypia, hyperplasia, or papillary clusters. Conclusions The DHRS continues to identify early stage bladder cancer and other abnormalities among workers exposed to BNA before 1981 and generates useful clinical, psycho-social, and epidemiologic data. Am. J. Ind. Med. 43: 142,148, 2003. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Long-Term Results of Endonasal Sinus Surgery in Sinonasal PapillomasTHE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 9 2003Marcel Kraft MD Abstract Objective To assess the value of endonasal sinus surgery in the management of sinonasal papillomas. Study Design Retrospective study including 43 patients operated on for sinonasal papilloma in a long-term follow-up. Methods In 26 cases (60%) an endonasal approach, in eight cases (19%) an external approach, and in four cases (9%) a combined procedure was performed to remove these tumors. Five septal lesions (12%) were resected under direct vision. The original sections and charts of all patients were reviewed to assess clinical data. Follow-up information was available for 42 of our patients (98%) with a mean follow-up of 62 months. Results Histologic examination revealed 34 cases of inverted papilloma (79%), five cases of exophytic papilloma (12%), and four cases of columnar cell papilloma (9%). Malignancy occurred in 4 of 43 patients (9%), and recurrences developed in 8 of 42 patients (19%). Two of these recurrences happened after endoscopic sinus surgery (two inverted papillomas), three after lateral rhinotomy (three inverted papillomas), one after a combined procedure (one inverted papilloma), and two after simple resection (two exophytic papilloma). Conclusions In keeping with our experience, the endonasal endoscopic approach, often in combination with a medial maxillectomy, is favored for the treatment of sinonasal papilloma because of a lower recurrence rate and a better cosmetic result. In some larger tumors and lesions in difficult locations, better visualization can be obtained by a combined external and endonasal approach. [source] Seborrhoeic wart or basal cell papilloma: what's in a name?BRITISH JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 5 2002Commentary No abstract is available for this article. [source] Rapid induction of skin and mammary tumors in human c-Ha- ras proto-oncogene transgenic rats by treatment with 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene followed by 12- O -tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetateCANCER SCIENCE, Issue 3 2004Cheol Beom Park We have established a transgenic rat line carrying 3 copies of the human c-Ha- ras proto-oncogene with its own promoter region (Jcl/SD-TgN(HrasGen)128Ncc) (Hras128 rat), expression being detectable in almost all organs. We have already demonstrated that the rat is highly sensitive to mammary, esophagus and bladder carcinogenesis. In the present study, male and female transgenic and wild-type littermates were topically treated with 2.5 mg of 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) dissolved in 1.0 ml of acetone on the back skin at 50 days after birth. Starting 1 week thereafter, they were again topically treated with 100 nmol of 12- O -tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) dissolved in 0.5 ml of acetone 3 times weekly for the following 31 weeks. In males treated with DMBA and/or TPA, skin tumors, including both squamous cell papillomas (SCP) and carcinomas (SCC), were preferentially induced at the DMBA-TPA painting sites: DMBA-TPA, 15/15 (100%); DMBA, 6/8 (75%); TPA, 1/6 (16.7%). They were also, unexpectedly, induced on remote scrotal skin: DMBA-TPA, 13/15 (86.7%); DMBA, 5/8 (62.5%); TPA, 0/6 (0%). Lesions were thus more frequent in the DMBA-TPA group than with DMBA or TPA alone. In females, adenomas and adenocarcinomas of the mammary glands were preferentially induced: DMBA-TPA, 12/14 (85.7%); DMBA, 6/8 (75%); TPA, 3/6 (50%), with only a few small skin papillomas at painting sites. Incidences and numbers of the mammary and skin tumors were much greater in Hras128 rats than in their wild-type counterparts. PCR-RFLP analysis of the transgene indicated that the percentage of the cell populations harboring a mutation in codons 12 and/or 61 ranged from 2% to 60% in individual tumors; skin tumors showed more mutations in codon 61 in the DMBA-treated groups. In contrast, no mutations were detected in the endogenous rat c-Ha-ras gene. These results indicate that the Hras128 rat is highly susceptible to DMBA-TPA skin and mammary carcinogenesis, thus providing a unique painting model for skin as well as mammary gland carcinogenesis, that would be suitable for investigating the role of transgene mutations. [source] |